VOL. LXXVIH. Tug BEN mw BEng ¢ 1 PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE What i: and What it 2 Part of the State System of Public Education v 4 ts Doing as College fre ty quent i k that, if it were upon f ihe great lines « Hrougn trav. ie if re hundreds or thousands dally ing t wld see the extent and wr ( 11.4 ia besuty of its grounds, and ¢« fo exuiniae the excellence of ils €« men together with the quality of its work, doup Wi estimation ihe held y Lhe propis Of Phere is doubtless a messu ies ie ts 1} remark, out, on tie vers the i ak hie location has great its unusual beauty aud its freedom fu line ys College Of r difficult ri w=! ia “ mode one of the most singuis table errors respecting the to it duty of Feaniid Dit reference te aud the tuitie titled nent For absolutely them tion, as will be show! brief ou line of lege aud the course gpecting it. The College w for instruction in practic There a considerabie pre against the wo where young men form usefulness, afterwards explained, the #1 vas Lthouy judi HRMMONE farmers as a piace Pp to h than 4 ’s d ‘Uollege, were supposed habits of aud for that Pp idleness rather FERSOI, BA8 Was institution was called the Farmer's High School of Pennsylvania land as a site for the ipstitution were offer ed in several parts of the State and, after a very careful examination bya f Douations of committee consisting of Governor Pol lock, Judge Watts and Dr. Elwyn, the Board accepted the gift of 200 acres in Ceutre county from General James Ir- vin, to whieh it soon after wards added by purchase 200 acres more. The institution looked from the first as belonging to the peo- ple of the Commonwealth. The Gov- Wns upon ernor, who was by the charter made a mefuber of the Board of Trustees, pre- sided at its first meeting, in ge ecting » location and in many ways showed Lis active interest in the enter prise. All worked together for a com- mon public interest, aud the Legisia- ture co-operated by making what were in those days liberal appropriations, For the purpose of providing the nec- essary funds for erecting and equip- ping building, the State Agricultural Society gave $11,865, the Trustees rais- ed $25,000 by subscription and the Leg- fslature, in 1857, appropriated $25,000, absolutely, and $25,000 more on condi- tion that a similar amount should be raised by private subscription, which wae done, the entire amount sabserib- eo und raised by the Trustees, being $34,785 In 1861, the Legislature made an appropriation of $40,900, for the completion of buildings, though the fustitution had been opened, February 20th, 1859, with such accommodations as were then available in one end of the present Main Building. The scheme of instrucddon was put upon a collegiate basis from the begin. ning. stated, in 1862, that “the school, on being organized, adopted a course of fnstruction in Mathematies and Nat. ural Heiences more extensive than that assisted ’ Cost A $150,000—Gi fe ml raw 3 ¥ vege / PP il A NGTEW irl nel ' 3 required a correspondingly longer time for graduating, and that the Trustees only awaited the time in which they de its build- Accordir nge iis three years after it name was changed nns had tural College of Ps 1 3 the 1874, after a the Aet of Col Slate I ess WOrK d that fan By Niates ion, tat recommendation of the Rarveyor Gen- e eral, consolidating all the bonds in which the j seeds of Wo the sales of land wen invested into a single scrip had | f SU OO, Act egisiatur i i rr y 11 f bond rihe sum of 3 hese successive 8 of C MI ress, and of the A- { Pennsyly rightly interpreted I'h only ¢ pu LAN 2 CE I COMMENCEMENT 6, 1904, CLOSE WEDNESDAY. The commencement exercises gone through almost to the scheduled in the published program were letter as The weather throughout was fair, and the attendance fully above, the average were than at any previous time up; and possibly it from said there is more visitors a The alumni luncheon, as is usually (jeneral f the the case, was well attended, A. president OF board of Was nster, Brief addresses were made by Prof, Gill, who spoke for the faculty ; A, A Pitt James Beaver, trustee s, toast Patterson, of burg. the Heckman, represented association ; He Edgar for the ecitizet Wade Hampton Barnes, of Brooklyn, for the President Athert LO, alumni WY, 33 Eradusling Class | } iustitution’s ned In the Junior prize was awarded Paul M, BpoKe of Lhe Oratorical contest aim Liaceyville, Pa The d Miller, of to countLy. The Openin Kiliott Was a it 1 ' $ elegates elected (on Venaugo county 1 Judge G BU COB sommencement address, “The Future" by William is, of Ithaca, New York, f the exercises. “Hou bay o£ Rev, Caril ure adding Teal HIALION « The pres ouble’ by THE GRADUATING CLASS seventy -one Young Men and Two Women Begin Life's Work Young nt exercises for the new During the ¢ of 1903, ground was broken MEHMMenCeins: Agricultural building, provided by an act of the legislatare of May, 1803. One section of this building —devoted to and is now When completed the group main agricultural the front of the in ti} picture | a dairying—is a realization, in will building use, of a forming shown consist group, as ne dairy building in the rear, congected with the main building by a corridor, and a building for the respiration-calo- rim ter, with the main building. The building for calorimeter is already in use, connected the respiration- The con- tative in Congress, for the purpose of aiding io the establishment of Col leges, based on the idea which had already taken form in Pennaylva- nia, in the establishment of this Col- lege, same In 15863 the Legislature of Pennsyl- vania sccepted the grant, By the same Act the Legislature appointed {the Governor (Curtin,) the Auditor General (General Hartranft) and the | Burveyor General (General Campbell) ia Board of Commissioners, with fall {| power to dispose of the land scrip, {and directed that, as soon as an io- | come should begin to accrue from any investment of the proceeds of the sales, { they should pay over the samme to the Trustees of the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania, on the ground ex press. ly stated in the Act—that the College was then actually giving the kind of instruction required by the law of Congress, Three years 'ater (April 11th, 1866) {off a debt, contracted in the erection | and equiptaent of the original building. i | | of struction the main building will complete the group, and wiil be one of the finest agricultural buildiogs in the United States, The buildings are in the Italian style and contain two stories above a high basement. The base is of Hummels. town brownstone, the superstructure of a rich Roman brick with terra cotta trimmings. The buildings are being constructed in the most substantial manner and will fireproof throughout. The corridors and work rooms in the Dairy Building have tiled floors and a tile wainscot six feet nigh, the remain- der of the interior finish being of red be intent of Congress, The 1583 a careful filling the committee presented in and elaborate report which sustained and the of the Trustees, commended policy In 1887 the Henate committee on ap- propriations visited the College and were unanimously of the opinion that the State could no 'onger Le justified im neglecting to make provision fora more liberal and worthy compliance with the conditions upon which the congressional graut of lands had been accepted. At that time all the work of the College was carried on in the single building thst had been erected when the Lostitution begau its work, The Committee clearly saw that the vide additional buildings and equip- each Legislature has made appropria- tions either for new buildings or for the repair and modification of old ones and (toa less extent) for maintenance, The aggregate of these opriations, 37 an aver. Authorized by the State at a oak. A college | with the eating plant serves to bring high and low pressure steam and elec- tricity the building, heated and ventilated by the Sturtevant system. The machinery is operated by electric but high steam for operating steam turbine separators is also while the laboratory will be supplied with gas from a gaso- line plant The basement of the Dairy Building contains a room twenty-two by forty- four feet for instruction in private dairying, a workshop twenty-one by thirty-five feet, two cheese curing rooms, one with refrigerators, a fan tunnel conoecting {to power, pressure provided, been ex pended in creating a perma nent plant of which many generations of students wil! receive the benefit, This leaves a total of $202,420, or an | average of $12,051.25 a year, which has | been appropriated for the maintenance | of various branches of instruction not | sufficiently provided for by the United | States funds, Second, that even these considerable appropriations are far less than many other and less wealthy States have been regularly making during the same period, for a similar purpose, and must be considered as practically cover- ing a period of thirty-six years instead of sixteen, since the State during the twenty years from 1867 to 1887 appro- pristed not a single dollar towards the maintenance of improvement of the College—its only appropriation being | on= of $80,000 00 for the payment fa mortgage which it had twelve years | before authorized to be placed on the | original property. This would give | ‘an average annual appropriation from | 1867 to 1908 of $25,602 34, for all pur- | poses, for which the State has a great (and valuable permanent plant, worth | today every dollar of the entire aggre- | gate of its appropriations. Cost of $100,000. and an ice machine room. } 5 3 a Uw utter room, f. i main floor is the ur by thirty-five d wash room, a irty-f el, and in- large refriger- Tie i commodious toilet and locker milk bottling room and office, second floor contains a large lec t room, thirty-four by forty-four feet, a small lecture room, twenty-two ure by thirty-five feet, a milk testing labo- ratory, iwenty-two by thirty-two feet, and offices for the Professors of Dairy Husbandry and of Agricultural Bae- teriology. Ample storage room is provided in the attic, and a large lift connects all the stories, New Alexandria unkie, East Berkies 1 El Elder's Ridge Fenstermacher, Danville ¥ Garay, vin Temple Heck, r Elwood Ketcham, 3 Jomeph Morrissey Franklin Paul Olin Noble, Banydert Abram Br $ Irvin Pres ay Cook % oi “4, ty Asa Truman \ CHEMISTRY sy Andrews, State College Van Reed Evans, Cacoosing tn Allen Fox, Hughesville oberi Harvey Lyons, Union City William Harvey MeCune, McKeosport Thomas Jacob Moser, Mahaffey Mahlon Jacob Rentschier, Centreport Charles Henry Swanger, Lebanon MINING Hall Maclay Crosman, Harrisburg William VanGundy Detwiler, Uniontown Paul Gray Elder, Philipsburg Harold Coulter George, Warren Broce MeCamant, Haivismng ht, Allegheny Horatio Cadwallader Ray, Tyrone George Thurston Smith, Mauch Chunk AGRICULTURE Wade Hamplon Bares, Brookiyn Willis Ray Gorham, Condersport Norman Greenwalr Miller, Chambersburg Alvin Kubns Risser, State College LATIN SCIENCE Bertha Viola Gilliland, New Bloomfield Francis Elerd Pray, Jersey Shore GENERAL SCIENCE Evan Petit kiljugren, State College Clyde Griffith Thompson, Clearfield BIOLOGY Thomas Charlton LeFevre, Chatham PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE. What ¥ it for the You State is Doing th of This YIVARLIA ist compli sl all | and OW = ad- ier as wwe provided ne for each Bins i Parse 4 ha £ a rial 04 Ve Oe awarded by the Governor of the Com- are of and are satisfae- monwealth., These sg *holarships or the entire lege course MIF PAY ’ seh 13 eh ks Our ye are, pt aed £1 conduct lara} £3 iarsaip of the hol In of tricts they are awarded by representing it, subject to each the He dis- the Seastor such exami- nations or other tests as he may ap- natorial That these facts are becoming recognized is shown by the very rapid increase during the past few years in the number of students enrolled. Last year 200 students were admitted to the Freshman class and between thirty-five and forty to the sub-Freshman or pre- paratory class. Another noticeable feature of the growth of the past few years bas been the increasingly large number of students in attendance who tare either wholly or in part dependent upon their own resources. In the sharp competitions of actual business and professional life the gradu- ates of themselves fuliy able to hold their own, and have, in not few instances, achieved ex- ceptionaily brillinnt success, It is no mere figure of speech, but a matter of cold ealealation, to say that the power of many young men of Pennsylvania, personally and professionally, has been multiplied a hundred fold, and in some cases many hundred-fold, by the | training they have received at the State College. this college find a These young men come very largely | from that powerful middie class which | in add the history of Pennsylvania lias {made the strength of the Commons wealth--its bone and sinew, its heart and brain, They come from families that represent industry, intelligence, enterprise and good citizenship. They represent parents who believe that the best heritage they can leave their sons and daughters, next to a good exams ple, is a good education, and many of whom are making every possible sac rifice to that end. They have been trained to habits of self-help and look upon the college as a meaus of prepar- ing themselves for greater usefulness Total number of graduates, seventy and efficiency.